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SNAKES 3-27-06. Stealths of the Shadows. Safety in the field is imperative. Never step over a log. Snakes often rest coiled up next to objects, and you may get bitten when your foot startles them. Instead, always step on logs then take a stride off.
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SNAKES3-27-06 Stealths of the Shadows
Safety in the field is imperative. Never step over a log. Snakes often rest coiled up next to objects, and you may get bitten when your foot startles them.
In Sri Lanka, cobra charmers are plentiful. BTW, just where is that big snake going???
But, in the tropics, some snakes fly!Chrysopelea from SE Asia (National Geographic).
We walked right by this one – the third person in line saw it. Cockscomb, 2005.
Tommygoff in Rabinowitz’s wrecked airplane. Orlena Tampira & Ryan Englebrecht looking into the hole (bottom left is what they saw; Dr. Bob leaning inside plane to take the photo of the 6 ft fer-de-lance on the right).
Eyelash Palm-Pitviper, Bothriechis schlegelii - Belize Photos by Marceau Ratard
Eyelash Palm-Pitviper, Bothriechis schlegelii, juvenile. This species often rests flat against tree trunks in Belize forests.photo by Thomas Eimermacher
A hawk moth caterpillar, Hemeroplanes ornatusphoto from Natural History Magazine
Saw-scale Viper, Echis coloratus – Note that it is lying with its sides curved & in contact. This allows it to rub its sides together and make a loud hissing sound. Africa
African Horned Viper, Cerastes cerastes: Convergent with the American Sidewinder Rattlesnake due to use of desert habitat; nestles down in the sand and ambushes prey.
Velvety-Green Night Adder, Causus resinus – Africa - not all vipers look like venomous snakes.
Bibron’s Burrowing Asp, Atractaspis bibronii – Africa – feed on rodents in burrows; have the ability to move the fangs out of the mouth, pointing to the rear, an adaptation for envenomating a number of mice as they scurry away and past the predator in the burrow. Don’t try to pick them up behind the head – they can bite backwards! Photo by Harry W. Greene.
HOW CAN ONE TELL A CORAL SNAKE FROM ITS “MIMICS”? • In the U.S. and Belize, remember this poem: Red and yellow kill a fellow, red and black friend of Jack. This means that if red rings touch yellow rings, it is venomous; if red rings touch black rings, it is not venomous. • Warning: This does not work everywhere – check out some of the venomous coral snakes in the following slides.
Are all red, yellow (tan), and black non-venomous snakes actually mimicing venomous coral snakes? That is the theory, but there is a strong possibility that this color combination is cryptic. Remember, they mostly live underground. Also, when lying still, they tend to be obvious, but when they are 1) in the shade or 2) begin to move, they are extremely cryptic.
Non-venomous Milk Snake, Lampropeltis triangulum, from Cockscomb, Belize – 2002.
False Coral, Erythrolamprus mimus, a mildly venomous coral snake mimic.
Calico False Coral Snake, Oxyrhopus petola – a non-venomous nocturnal snake - Belize
Guatemalan Neck Band Snake, Scaphiodontophis annulatus – how did this evolve? - Belize
Large Coral Snake, Micrurus lemniscatus – Trinidad (by John Moyle)
Aquatic Coral Snake, Micrurus surinamensis – displaying - Amazon Basin
Black Mamba, Dendroaspis polylepis – note the venom drops – Africa. The pink skin is possibly the result of a viper bite.
In the south Pacific, there is an octopus that mimics a sea snake
Mussurana, Clelia clelia: As an adult, mussurana’s eat snakes; as juveniles, they eat lizards (see a specimen extruding from a wound in this dead specimen’s side). As an adult it is very dark, but as a juvenile, it looks a bit like a coral snake.
Northern Cat-eyed Snake, Leptodeira septentrionalis - Belize
Cat-eyed Snake, Leptodeira septentrionalis, eating the eggs of the Red-eyed Frog.